ISTANBUL - The Turkish military on Thursday pounded positions held by Islamic State (IS) militants in Syria after a Turkish soldier was killed by fire from an area controlled by the militants.
The clashes - the most serious yet between the Turkish army and IS - came after the killing of 32 people in a suicide bombing Monday, blamed on IS, sparked an upsurge in violence. A day after the fatal shooting of two police claimed by Kurdish militants as “revenge” for the suicide bombing in the town of Suruc on the Syrian border, a policeman was shot dead in the majority Kurdish city of Diyarbakir.
The soldier was killed from fire from an area controlled by IS in Syria in the Turkish border region of Kilis, the state Anatolia news agency said.
The Dogan news agency said four soldiers had been wounded.
Turkish tanks from the fifth armoured brigade then responded by opening fire on targets controlled by IS militants in Syria, NTV television said, adding that one IS militant had also been killed.
Thirty-two people - mainly young activists, one as young as 18, preparing for an aid mission to Syria - were killed on Monday in a devastating suicide bombing in Suruc. That attack marked the first time the government had explicitly blamed IS for a strike in the country.
It also inflamed tensions with Turkey’s Kurdish minority, which is unhappy over the lack of support provided by the government to Kurdish militias fighting IS inside Syria.
Turkey has been accused of colluding in the past with IS extremists in the hope they might prove useful in its aim of knocking out Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Ankara has always vehemently denied the claims.
The military wing of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) claimed the killing of the two police in the border town of Ceylanpinar, accusing the two slain officers of collaborating with IS extremists.
Aged 24 and 25, they were given a funeral ceremony with full honours outside police headquarters in the regional centre of Sanliurfa, their coffins draped in the Turkish flag. “The martyrs never die, the people will never be divided,” dozens of police chanted, using a well known patriotic slogan.
The state Anatolia news agency said the three suspects had been arrested in early morning raids and were being questioned, without giving further details.
In the latest violence one Turkish policeman was shot dead and another badly wounded in an attack Thursday by armed men during a routine traffic check in Turkey’s majority Kurdish-city of Diyarbakir, hospital sources said.
Meanwhile the Patriotic Revolutionary Youth Movement (YDG-H), seen as a youth wing of the PKK, claimed it had shot dead an alleged former IS fighter in Istanbul late Tuesday.
The Hurriyet daily reported on Thursday that Ankara had finally given the green light to US forces for use of the Incirlik air base in the campaign against IS in Syria. It said that the accord was finalised in telephone talks Wednesday between President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his US counterpart Barack Obama.
The White House said regional security remained a top priority, and pledged to work closely with Turkey on a number of fronts.
The leaders spoke about “deepening our ongoing cooperation in the fight against ISIL and common efforts to bring security and stability to Iraq and a political settlement to the conflict in Syria,” the White House said in a statement, using an acronym for the IS group.
Obama also offered condolences over recent attacks in Turkey, after a suicide attack blamed on the Islamic State group killed 32 people in the small town of Suruc across the border with Syria.
The attack was the deadliest in Turkey since 2013 and prompted a reprisal by a Kurdish militant group which killed two Turkish police.
Obama “conveyed condolences on behalf of the American people to the families of the victims, and the two leaders affirmed that the United States and Turkey stand united in the fight against terrorism,” according to the statement.
They also said they would strengthen efforts to stem the flow of foreign fighters into Iraq and Syria, and secure Turkey’s border, a popular entry point for militants looking to join the IS group.
“The president reaffirmed the commitment of the United States to Turkey’s national security,” the White House said.